Does Increasing Women's Schooling Raise the Schooling of the Next Generation? Reply
- 1 November 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Economic Association in American Economic Review
- Vol. 95 (5) , 1745-1751
- https://doi.org/10.1257/000282805775014263
Abstract
We reassess the empirical robustness of the empirical findings in Jere R. Berhman and Mark R. Rosenzweig (2002) using new information on schooling which was collected and coded independently of codings carried out by both Kate Antonovics and Arthur Goldberger, and Berhmamn and Rosenzweig. We conclude that the independently coded data and the codings by Antonovics and Goldberger provide additional support for Behrman and Rosenzweig's original results showing that the positive cross-sectional relationship between a mother's schooling and her child's schooling is not robust to controls for unmeasured, intergenerationally correlated endowments, while the positive effect of paternal schooling is robust.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- School subsidies for the poor: evaluating the Mexican Progresa poverty programJournal of Development Economics, 2004
- Does Increasing Women's Schooling Raise the Schooling of the Next Generation?American Economic Review, 2002
- Can Private School Subsidies Increase Enrollment for the Poor? The Quetta Urban Fellowship ProgramThe World Bank Economic Review, 1999
- Birth Order, Schooling, and EarningsJournal of Labor Economics, 1986
- An Investigation of the Labor Market Earnings of Panamanian Males Evaluating the Sources of InequalityThe Journal of Human Resources, 1986
- Intergenerational Earnings Mobility in the United States: Some Estimates and a Test of Becker's Intergenerational Endowments ModelThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1985